[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 11]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.1314(a)-2]

[Page 641-643]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.1314(a)-2  Adjustment to other barred taxable years.

    (a) An adjustment is authorized under section 1311 with respect to a 
taxable year or years other than the year of the error, but only if all 
of the following requirements are met:
    (1) The tax liability for such other year or years must be affected, 
or must have been treated as affected, by a net operating loss deduction 
(as defined in section 172) or by a capital loss carryback or carryover 
(as defined in section 1212).
    (2) The net operating loss deduction or capital loss carryback or 
carryover must be determined with reference to the taxable year with 
respect to which the error was made.
    (3) On the date of the determination the adjustment with respect to 
such other year or years must be prevented by some law or rule of law, 
other than sections 1311 through 1315 and section 7122 and the 
corresponding provisions of prior revenue laws.
    (b) The amount of the adjustment for such other year or years shall 
be computed in a manner similar to that provided in Sec. 1.1314(a)-1. 
The tax previously determined for such other year or years shall be 
ascertained. A recomputation must then be made to ascertain the increase 
or decrease in tax, if any, resulting solely from the correction of the 
net operating loss deduction or capital loss carryback or carryover.

[[Page 642]]

The difference between the tax previously determined and the tax as 
recomputed is the amount of the adjustment. In the recomputation, no 
consideration shall be given to items other than the following:
    (1) The items upon which the tax previously determined for such 
other year or years was based, and
    (2) The net operating loss deduction or capital loss carryback or 
carryover as corrected.

In determining the correct net operating loss deduction or capital loss 
carryback or carryover, no changes shall be made in taxable income (net 
income in the case of taxable years subject to the provisions of the 
Internal Revenue Code of 1939 or prior revenue laws), net operating loss 
or capital loss, for any barred taxable year, except as provided in 
section 1314. Section 172 and the corresponding provisions of prior 
revenue laws, and the regulations promulgated thereunder, prescribe the 
methods of computing the net operating loss deduction. Section 1212 and 
the corresponding provisions of prior revenue laws, and the regulations 
promulgated thereunder, prescribe the methods for computing the capital 
loss carryback and carryover.
    (c) A net operating loss deduction or a capital loss carryback or 
carryover determined with reference to the year of the error may affect, 
or may have been treated as affecting, a taxable year with respect to 
which an adjustment is not prevented by the operation of any law or rule 
of law. In such case, the appropriate adjustment shall be made with 
respect to such open taxable year. However, the redetermination of the 
tax for such open taxable year is not made pursuant to part II (section 
1311 and following), subchapter Q, chapter 1 of the Code, and the 
adjustment for such open year and the method of computation are not 
limited by the provisions of said sections.
    (d) The application of this section may be illustrated by the 
following example:

    Example: The taxpayer is a corporation which makes its income tax 
returns on a calendar year basis. Its net income in 1949, computed 
without any net operating loss deduction was $10,000, but because of a 
net operating loss deduction in excess of that amount resulting from a 
carryback of a net operating loss claimed for 1950, it paid no income 
tax for 1949. On its return for 1950 it showed an excess of deductions 
over gross income of $14,000, and it paid no income tax for 1950. For 
the year 1951 its net income, computed without any net operating loss 
deduction, was $15,000, and a net operating loss deduction of $13,000 
was allowed ($4,000 of which was attributable to the carryover from 1950 
and $9,000 of which was attributable to the carryback of a net operating 
loss of $9,000 sustained in 1952). In 1957 the assessment of 
deficiencies or the allowance of refunds for all of said years are 
barred by the statute of limitations.
    (i) A Tax Court decision entered in 1957 with respect to the taxable 
year 1953 constituted a determination under which an adjustment is 
authorized to the taxable year 1950, the year with respect to which the 
error was made. This adjustment increases income for said year by 
$15,000, so that instead of a net operating loss of $14,000, its 
corrected net income is $1,000 for 1950, and the tax computed on that 
income will be assessed as a deficiency for 1950. An adjustment is 
authorized under this section with respect to each of the years 1949 and 
1951, as the tax liability for each year was treated as affected by a 
net operating loss deduction which was determined by a computation in 
which reference was made to the year 1950. In the recomputation of the 
tax for 1949, the net operating loss carryback from 1950 will be 
eliminated, and in the recomputation of the tax for 1951 the net 
operating loss carryover from 1950 will be eliminated; for each of the 
years 1949 and 1951 there will be an adjustment which will be treated as 
a deficiency for said year.
    (ii) Assuming the same facts, except that the correction with 
respect to the year 1950 increases the net operating loss for said year 
from $14,000 to $20,000. As a result of this correction, there will be 
no change in the tax due for 1949 and 1950. However, the net operating 
loss deduction for 1951 is recomputed to be $19,000, the aggregate of 
the $10,000 carryover from 1950 and the $9,000 carryback from 1952 (the 
carryover from 1950 is the excess of the $20,000 net operating loss for 
1950 over the $10,000 net income for 1949, such 1949 income being 
determined without any net operating loss deduction). As a result of the 
correction of the net operating loss deduction for 1951, the tax 
recomputation will show no tax due for said year, and the adjustment for 
1951 will result in a refund or credit of the tax previously paid. 
Moreover, computations resulting from this adjustment will disclose a 
net operating loss carryover from 1952 to 1953 of $4,000, that is, the 
excess of the $9,000 net operating loss for 1952 over the $5,000 net 
income for 1951 (such net income for 1951 being computed as the $15,000 
reduced by the carryover of $10,000 from 1950,

[[Page 643]]

the carryback from 1952 not being taken into account). A further 
adjustment is authorized under section 1311 with respect to any 
subsequent barred year in which the tax liability is affected by a 
carryover of the net operating loss from 1952, inasmuch as such 
carryover from 1952 has been determined by a computation in which 
reference was made to 1950, the taxable year of the error.

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 12038, Nov. 26, 1960, as amended by T.D. 7301, 39 FR 
972, Jan. 4, 1974]